Contents

David Flint was born in 1938[1] and grew up in the Sydney suburb of Waverley.[2] His mother was Indonesian.[3] She enjoyed music and dancing, and David took her out dancing every week until she died at age 90. This was always disapproved of by his father, a public servant, champion amateur boxer, and member of a puritanical religious organisation.[2] He studied at Sydney Boys High School before studying law, economics and international relations at the Universities of London, Paris, and Sydney, leading to a career in the law and academia. Flint states that he was "a socialist in his student days".[4]

Admitted as a lawyer in New South Wales and England, he practised for a number of years, lecturing in several university business and law schools. This included a wide range of subjects including business, tax, antitrust, comparative, constitutional and international law.

He has written widely in various journals and in the press in English and very occasionally in French on topics such as the media, international economic law, European Union law, Australia's constitution, Australia's 1999 constitutional referendum and on direct democracy. His views are often sought by the Australian and international media.

At UTS in the 1980s, he was elected and re-elected president of the union staff association and was a delegate to the NSW Labor Council.

In 1987 he was appointed the UTS Dean of Law in 1987 and reappointed twice, holding office until 1997. He was elected four times by law deans as Convener of the Committee of Australian Law Deans, holding office from 1990 to 1993. In 1990 he was appointed by the federal government as a member of the International Legal Services Council, a position he held for six years. In 1989, after an assessment by a committee including a former chief justice and a professor of international law in three Australian universities, he was awarded a chair in law at UTS. He has held professorial positions in other universities, and is now an emeritus professor of law.

During his term as Dean, he introduced a full-time law degree and a series of joint programmes with other disciplines including computing and science. He also proposed significant changes to Australian university and to Australian legal education, including:

for the first time in an Australian public university, twelve months teaching through Summer and Winter programmes;

the introduction of a range of graduate programmes for non-lawyers;

the first Australian professional doctorate, the SJD;

the first Australian university programmes in Alternative Dispute Resolution;

the inclusion of periods of study at foreign universities as part of law and other programmes;

the incorporation of Practical Legal training into the LL.B – “one-stop” legal education;

a detailed proposal for the introduction of a US style Doctor Juris;

strong support for the introduction of AUSTLII, based at UTS in a venture with UNSW, which gives open internet access to Australian statute and case law.

He has been Second Vice-President and National President for Australia of the World Jurist Association and was also president of the Federation of Australian Branches of the English Speaking Union and was for long a board member and former editor of the Australian Branch of the International Law Association.

Flint was appointed head of the Australian Press Council in 1987 in succession to the Hal Wootten. All previous chairmen were former senior judges. As deputy chairman and chairman of the Council's Freedom of the Press Committee, Flint was seen as bringing the Council back from the brink after it divided over how to react to the takeover of Herald and Weekly Times by News Limited and Wootten resigned. Flint held office until 1997, streamlining the complaints process and enhancing the Council's role in defending freedom of the press, including filing and appearing on an amicae curiae brief to the High Court. He was also successful in promoting the Council in the media and to the public, all within a tight budget. He requested that the usual honorarium be used for media research and other Council related purposes. From 1992 to 1996 he was Chairman of the Executive Council of the World Association of Press Councils.

In 1998, he was invited by the Howard Liberal National Government to chair the Australian Broadcasting Authority, although the only political party he had previously belonged to was the Labor Party, where he had been a branch president. By 2004 he had become a member of the Liberal Party.[2] He resigned from the ABA in 2004, after a controversy over a letter which he had sent to broadcaster Alan Jones soon after his appointment and well before the leadup to his heading the ABA's cash for comment inquiry into commercial broadcasting. The letter mentioned an international affairs seminar where Paul Kelly had stressed the influence of Alan Jones' radio programme. When a controversy later arose about the direct sponsorship of commercial radio presenters, Flint announced to the media that he would ask the ABA board to set up a public inquiry, which was agreed unanimously. As chairman of the ABA, Flint was chairman of the inquiry. In an appearance years later on the ABC's Enough Rope television program, John Laws claimed his broadcasting competitor Alan Jones of placing pressure on the Prime Minister, John Howard, to keep Flint as head of the ABA. Laws stated he had heard Jones say that he had "instructed" the Prime Minister to reappoint Flint in 2001.[citation needed]

Flint insists that his resignation was "not an admission of guilt".[2] and asserts that he had forgotten the letter, one of a large number which he wrote.[5] Flint claimed that, despite a thorough Freedom of Information investigation, the one letter proliferated into a "series of fan letters" in hostile parts of the media.[6] The television program Media Watch, whose pursuit of the story was recognised by a Walkley Award for investigative journalism, claimed that it had provided opportunity for Flint to unambiguously deny the existence of more than one letter. According to Media Watch, Flint's reply "did not deny the existence of the correspondence".[7] Flint asserted that Laws mistakenly thought Flint was behind more recent ABA action against him. On the contrary, Flint stated in his book Malice in Media Land that he had dissented from the decision to proceed against Laws on the grounds that it was both unjustified and unlawful.

He was awarded World Outstanding Legal Scholar, World Jurists Association, Barcelona, in October 1991. On 12 June 1995 was made a Member of the Order of Australia "in recognition of service to the print media, particularly as Chairman of the Australian Press Council and to international relations".[8]

David Flint has been open about his homosexuality since his early adult years, but never discusses his private life or identifies his long-term partner with whom he has shared a home for over 30 years.[2] He opposes same-sex marriage.[9][10]

"Foreign Investment and the New International Economic Order" in Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources in International Law (1984)

The Law of Foreign Investment in Australia (1985)

Monetary Law Developments in the 1990s in The Right to Development in International Law (1992)

Business Law of the European Community with Gabriel Moens (1993)

Australia in Press Law and Practice (1993)

Lapdog, Watchdog or Junkyard Dog? The Media's Role in Australia's Monarchy/Republic Debate in The Australian Constitutional Monarchy (1994)

Economic Development, Foreign Investment and the Law, Issues of Private Sector Constitutional and Legislative Safeguards for Foreign Direct Investment: A Comparative Review Utilising Australia and China, with Robert Pritchard and Thomas Chiu, in Involvement, Foreign Investment and the Rule of Law in a New Era (1995)

Freedom of Speech and Media Regulation in India in Asian Laws Through Australian Eyes (1997)

Foreign Investment with Thomas Chiu (1998)

The Australian Constitution in No Case Papers (1998)

The courts and the media; what reforms are needed and why? in The Courts and the Media (1999)

The Cane Toad Republic (1999)

Australian Republicanism, Sovereignty and the States in Restructuring Australia: Regionalism, republicanism and reform of the nation-state (2004)

Australian Defamation Law Reform in Defamation and Freedom of the Press (2004)

The Twilight of the Elites (2003)

Malice in Media Land (2005)

A Successful Conservative Party Ready to Rebuild in Liberals and Power (2007)